James Hirsen is ostensibly Newsmax’s “media analyst,” but he’s also a pretty tight Trump toady. And he’s upset when others are portrayed as such.
In his March 27 column, Hirsen complains about how Democrats are allegedly trying to “systematically disparaging, discrediting, and sometimes seeking to destroy, in a political sense” Republican Rep. Devin Nunes for his highly politicized handing on the House investigation of allegedly links between Russia and the Trump campaign. Hirsen parrots the right-wing spin that “officials in the Obama administration had wrongfully revealed and disseminated the identities of U.S. citizens” but doesn’t actually prove it.
Hirsen then runs to Nunes’ defense of perhaps the most indefensible thing Nunes has done, briefing President Trump on the investigation before even members of his own committee:
The critique of Nunes by the Democrats and their mainstream media allies focuses on the following:
1. Nuness disclosure having been made without first notifying committee Democrats.
2. Nuness having briefed the White House on the newly exposed evidence.
The House Intelligence Committee Chairman apologized to Democratic committee members for the apparent break with protocol of not notifying Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., ranking member of the House Intelligence Committee (and his fellow committee members) before going public.
Nunes did not, however, apologize for providing the newly revealed evidence to the White House, nor was he obliged to do so.
Nunes said that the “unmasking” of names of individuals in the reports was a development “significant” enough to warrant his briefing the president as soon as possible.
The chairman told Fox News that he believed he had a “duty and obligation” to inform President Trump.
The headline on Hirsen’s column, by the way, is “Nunes Briefed Trump Out of a Sense of Duty Only.” Hirsen does not know that; he only knows what Nunes has claimed about it.
You’d think a media analyst would be smart enough not to solely take someone’s word for something.